ATC indicts PTI leaders including Yasmin Rashid

Yasmin Rashid (left), Ejaz Chaudhary and Rubina Jameel. — Punjab Assembly/Senate of Pakistan/NA
Yasmin Rashid (left), Ejaz Chaudhary and Rubina Jameel. — Punjab Assembly/Senate of Pakistan/NA
  • All defendants have pleaded not guilty to their involvement in the May 9 riots.
  • Court invites witnesses to record their statements on December 16th.
  • The accused are arrested from Sarwar Road police station in two cases.

LAHORE: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leaders Dr. Yasmin Rashid, Ejaz Chaudhary and Rubina Jameel, were on Tuesday indicted by an Anti-Terror Court (ATC) in Lahore in a case related to the May 9 violence.

However, all three defendants have pleaded not guilty in the case. The party’s leaders have been jailed for months after being charged in cases related to the May 9 riots, which were sparked after the arrest of PTI chief Imran Khan in a corruption case.

The ATC has now asked the witnesses in the case to record their statements on December 16 while copies of the challan were distributed among the accused in the previous hearing.

All three accused were booked in two cases at Sarwar Road police station in Lahore.

It should be noted that the ATC has remanded Dr. Rashid extended and handed them over to the Punjab Police by November 27, in a case related to the provocative speeches made against state institutions at Sherpao Bridge in Lahore on May 9.

After the riots and a series of arrests that followed, Khan was released in the Toshkhana case, but many of his party’s leaders, workers and supporters remained behind bars or were repeatedly rearrested in several cases registered against them.

Currently, the PTI chief and his party’s deputy leader Shah Mahmood Qureshi are in custody in the cipher case, while other leaders remain in custody pending trials in cases related to the violence that took place on May 9 various courts in the country.

The May 9 riots were sparked across most of the country following the arrest of the ousted prime minister in a £190 million settlement case. Hundreds of PTI workers and senior leaders were put behind bars for their involvement in violence and attacks on military installations.

During the protests, the miscreants attacked civilian and military installations including Jinnah House and General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi. The military designated May 9 as “Black Day” and decided to try the protesters under the Army Act.

CELINE CASTRONUOVO

CELINE CASTRONUOVO is a Dailynationtoday U.S. News Reporter based in London. His focus is on U.S. politics and the environment. He has covered climate change extensively, as well as healthcare and crime. CELINE CASTRONUOVO joined Dailynationtoday in 2023 from the Daily Express and previously worked for Chemist and Druggist and the Jewish Chronicle. He is a graduate of Cambridge University. Languages: English. You can get in touch with me by emailing: celine@dailynationtoday.com.

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